Internal Medicine: An Illustrated Radiological Guide

1 Gastroenterolgy.
  • 1.1 Liver Cirrhosis.
  • 1.2 Fatty Liver Disease (Liver Steatosis).
  • 1.3 Recurrent Epigastric Pain.
  • 1.4 Infl ammatory Bowel Diseases.
  • 1.5 Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage.
2 Neurology.
  • 2.1 Stroke (Brain Infarction).
  • 2.2 Stroke Diseases and Syndromes.
  • 2.3 Intracranial Hemorrhage.
  • 2.4 Meningitis.
  • 2.5 Encephalitis.
  • 2.6 Epilepsy.
  • 2.7 Headache.
  • 2.8 Multiple Sclerosis and Other Demyelinating Diseases.
  • 2.9 Parkinsonism.
  • 2.10 Dementia.
  • 2.11 Huntington’s Disease.
  • 2.12 Heat Stroke (Pancerebellar Syndrome).
3 Pulmonology.
  • 3.1 Pleural Diseases.
  • 3.2 Alveolar Lung Diseases.
  • 3.3 Atelectasis (Lung Collapse).
  • 3.4 Sarcoidosis.
  • 3.5 Emphysema.
  • 3.6 Idiopathic Interstitial Pneumonias.
  • 3.7 Histiocytoses.
  • 3.8 Hemoptysis.
4 Cardiology.
  • 4.1 Acute Chest Pain.
  • 4.2 Diseases of the Great Vessels.
  • 4.3 Myocardial Diseases (Cardiomyopathies).
  • 4.4 Endocarditis.
  • 4.5 Pericardial Diseases.
5 Nephrology.
  • 5.1 Hypertension.
  • 5.2 Polycystic Kidney Disease.
6 Endocrinology and Metabolism.
  • 6.1 Grave’s Disease (Hyperthyroidism).
  • 6.2 Hyperparathyroidism.
  • 6.3 Growth Hormone Diseases.
  • 6.4 Osteoporosis.
  • 6.5 Rickets and Osteomalacia.
  • 6.6 Scurvy.
  • 6.7 Fluorosis.
  • 6.8 Lead Poisoning (Plumbism).
  • 6.9 Adrenal Glands Abnormalities.
  • 6.10 Sex Hormones Abnormalities.
  • 6.11 Sheehan Syndrome (Postpartum Hypopituitarism).
7 Rheumatology.
  • 7.1 Rheumatoid Arthritis.
  • 7.2 Ankylosing Spondylitis (Marie–Strümpell Disease).
  • 7.3 Gout Arthritis.
  • 7.4 CPPD and HADD.
  • 7.5 Osteoarthritis.
  • 7.6 Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis.
  • 7.7 Baastrup’s Disease (Spinout Process Impingement Syndrome).
  • 7.8 Scheuermann’s Disease (Juvenile Kyphosis Dorsalis).
  • 7.9 Sjögren Syndrome (Myoepithelial Sialadenitis).
  • 7.10 Behçet Disease.
  • 7.11 Sharp Syndrome (Mixed Connective Tissue Disease).
8 Hematology.
  • 8.1 Hemosiderosis and Hemochromatosis.
  • 8.2 b-Thalassemia Major (Cooley’s Anemia).
  • 8.3 Sickle Cell Disease.
  • 8.4 Pernicious Anemia.
  • 8.5 Hemophilia.
  • 8.6 Lymphomas.
  • 8.7 Leukemia.
  • 8.8 Multiple Myeloma (Khaler’s Disease).
  • 8.9 Amyloidosis.
  • 8.10 Evans’ Syndrome.
  • 8.11 Other Lymphatic Disorders.
9 Dermatology.
  • 9.1 Scleroderma (Systemic Sclerosis).
  • 9.2 Lipoid Proteinosis (Urbach-Weithe Disease).
  • 9.3 Dermatomyositis.
  • 9.4 Ochronosis (Alkaptonuria).
10 Diabetology.
  • 10.1 Diabetic Hand and Diabetic Foot.
  • 10.2 Diabetic Brain and Nervous System.
  • 10.3 Diabetic Syndromes.
  • 10.4 Diabetes Insipidus.
  • 10.5 Obesity, Gastric Banding, and Liposuction.
  • 10.6 Lipoatrophic–Lipodystrophic Syndromes.
11 Infectious Diseases and Tropical Medicine.
  • 11.1 Fever.
  • 11.2 Giardiasis.
  • 11.3 Amebiasis.
  • 11.4 Leprosy (Hansen Disease).
  • 11.5 Toxoplasmosis.
  • 11.6 Brucellosis (Malta Fever).
  • 11.7 Neurocysticercosis.
  • 11.8 Ascariasis.
  • 11.9 Guinea Worm Disease (Dracunculiasis).
  • 11.10 Hydatid Cyst (Echinococcosis).
  • 11.11 Chagas’ Disease (American Trypanosoma).
  • 11.12 Schistosomiasis (Bilharziasis).
  • 11.13 Tuberculosis.
  • 11.14 Typhoid Fever (Salmonellosis).
  • 11.15 Malaria.
  • 11.16 Animal Bites and Stings.
Index.


In any radiology department worldwide, around 60–70% of investigations deal with surgical cases: trauma, tumors, pre- and postsurgical assessment, surgical follow-ups, and more. In spite of that, radiology has a lot to offer in the field of internal medicine in terms of establishing, confirming, or rejecting diagnoses, or favoring differential diagnoses.

Before Dr. Jarrah Ali Al-Tubaikh joined radiology, he worked as an internal physician for almost a year and almost another year and half as a general surgeon. This clinical experience leads him to look at radiological images with the eye of a radiologist and the mind of a clinician when he examine patient radiological images. He even take a history and do a clinical examination if he have the chance when the patient is in the ultrasound, CT, or MRI room. He have always believed that the radiologist’s role is not confined to writing reports, but it can be broadened to establish the diagnosis in the first hand in the same way as the clinician do.

In the medical library, there are books dedicated to the clinical signs of internal medicine diseases; interestingly, there are no such books in the radiology library. Radiology books concentrate on the radiological signs according to the system involved, not according to the disease or the specialty. For example, looking for signs of multiple myeloma follows the bone marrow tumors in a musculoskeletal radiology book, not a radiological book that discusses diseases of hematology, for example, which is the main target and idea of this book.

This book is designed to put the radiologist in the internal physician’s shoes. It teaches radiologists how to think in terms of disease progression and complications, where to look for and to image these complications, and what are the best modalities used to reach a diagnosis. Also, the internal physicians can benefit from this book by learning what help radiology can offer them in establishing a diagnosis. The book also helps internal physicians to think like radiologists, in terms of what investigation they should request to confirm their diagnosis.

Each disease is mentioned with its pathophysiology, symptoms, clinical presentation, and how radiology can be used to establish the diagnosis or to look for the complications of this particular disease. Specialties covered in this book include gastroenterology, neurology, endocrinology, nephrology, cardiology, rheumatology, pulmonology, dermatology, hematology, diabetology, and tropical and infectious medicine.

The book works as a short textbook with an atlas of images. The book is not designed to serve as the only textbook for study. Doctors, or radiologists who are interested in more details about a certain disease, should refer to the standard medical or radiological textbooks.

The book is not confined to medical diseases alone. Pediatrics, gynecology, genetics, and some surgical cases are discussed in the differentials. Although the world’s new direction is toward subspecialties, this is not always the case in radiology. Internal medicine practitioners can refer a patient to a specialist when they feel the case requires it; this is unfortunately not always the case in radiology. Radiology residents may have a request involving an internal medicine case now, and the next case can be a pediatric or a surgical case. This situation of multispecialty diagnosis is faced by so many radiology residents around the world daily. Radiologists can refer the case to a senior, a more experienced, or a specialized radiologist, but again, this is not always the case, especially in hospitals with small radiology departments.

The author have tried in this book to summarize the diseases that can be in the differential diagnoses or related to a common disease. He have designed the book to mention only the diseases that can be ruled out by history and radiological images, which are the main tools for a radiology resident on duty in a hospital, or without a radiology specialist nearby. Moreover, the differentials are categorized as rare and uncommon diseases. He have specifically chosen these differentials to give the reader more insights and information about rare diseases that can have the same presentation as the disease discussed.
This modest work will be of assistance to residents and radiologists worldwide and will work as a quick useful tool to revise the most important signs of radiological diseases in a short time.


Key Features
  • Explains how radiology can be a powerful tool in diagnosing numerous internal medicine diseases.
  • Displays radiological and clinical features in high-quality images and illustrations.
  • Identifies differential diagnoses that can be ruled out by imaging alone.
  • Describes the underlying pathophysiology and its relevance to radiological features.
  • Serves as an excellent radiological atlas for internal medicine practitioners.


Book Details

  • Hardcover: 470 pages
  • Publisher: Springer; 1st edition (April 8, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 3642037089
  • ISBN-13: 978-3642037085
  • Product Dimensions: 10.3 x 7.8 x 1.1 inches
List Price: $239.00 
 
Tags:

Copyright 2010 Radiology Book Review - All Rights Reserved.
Designed by Web2feel.com | Bloggerized by Lasantha - Premiumbloggertemplates.com | Affordable HTML Templates from Herotemplates.com.